<p>Gaza teenager Bissam says she has trouble sleeping and concentrating as the buzzing sound of Israeli military drones above the crowded Palestinian enclave drives her to distraction.</p>.<p>When she is at home in the cramped family apartment, the 18-year-old said she feels that "the drone is constantly with me in my bedroom -- worry and fear don't leave our homes.</p>.<p>"Sometimes I have to put the pillow on my head so I don't hear its buzz," she said, adding that the drone noise gives her headaches.</p>.<p>Unmanned surveillance aircraft have become an integral part of Israel's 15-year-old blockade of the impoverished enclave, and 2.3 million Palestinians endure their incessant hum.</p>.<p>Bissam, whose family requested their surname be withheld for security reasons, said that together with the street noise, the drones create an unbearable cacophony.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/gaza-clears-rubble-buries-dead-as-truce-with-israel-holds-1134473.html" target="_blank">Gaza clears rubble, buries dead as truce with Israel holds</a></strong></p>.<p>"At night I try to review the lessons for my exams, but I can't read because of this annoying racket," she said from the cramped Gaza City apartment she shares with her parents and five siblings.</p>.<p>Each month, Israel uses drones above Gaza for 4,000 flying hours -- the equivalent of deploying five of the unmanned aircraft permanently in the sky -- the military told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>The drones "collect intelligence data 24 hours a day", said Omri Dror, a commander from Israel's Palmachim airbase where the aircraft take off.</p>.<p>During an 11-day war in May 2021 between Israel and Gaza militants, the Israeli army deployed 25 drones for 6,000 flight hours to constantly monitor the territory, according to army data.</p>.<p>It intensified that presence during a three-day conflict in August this year, using 30 drones for a total of more than 2,000 flight hours.</p>.<p>Bissam's mother Rim said she struggles to calm her children when the drones fly overhead, fearing an Israeli air strike could follow even if there is no active conflict.</p>.<p>"I'm basically scared like them. How can I reassure my children?" the 42-year-old said.</p>.<p>The din above the family home is particularly acute due to its proximity to a base of the Al-Qassam Brigades -- the armed wing of Gaza rulers Hamas -- but drones are also heard above busy shopping streets.</p>.<p>"The kids sleep intermittently. We wake up, we sleep, then we wake up" again, Rim said.</p>.<p>In Gaza's southern city of Khan Yunis, psychiatrist Iman Hijjo treats Palestinians whose conflict trauma is triggered by the sound of Israeli drones.</p>.<p>Israel and Hamas have fought four wars over the past 15 years.</p>.<p>"When an insect moves around you, you can hit it, but not the drone," Hijjo said, adding that the situation leads to a "sense of powerlessness".</p>.<p>"The drones keep Gaza's skies closed, without a horizon or hope," she said.</p>.<p>Children suffer "fear and anxiety" as a direct result of the drones, Hijjo said, lamenting a lack of scientific research to determine longer-term impacts.</p>.<p>"Children need to feel safe in order to develop," fellow psychiatrist Sami Oweida said. "But with the presence of drones in the sky, these feelings cannot flourish."</p>.<p>The unmanned aircraft are so omnipresent that artists have even referenced them in their works.</p>.<p>The "sound of drones flying above my family and friends stops the games, the chatting and the laughter", Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha wrote in his recent English-language collection "Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear".</p>.<p>He told AFP that "the buzzing of the drones and the intermittent raids of the F16 (warplanes) have become an integral part of our lives".</p>.<p>"I write about the sky, the sea, the clouds, the setting sun, my children, my neighbours," he added. "But always, the drone is there. It fails to leave us."</p>
<p>Gaza teenager Bissam says she has trouble sleeping and concentrating as the buzzing sound of Israeli military drones above the crowded Palestinian enclave drives her to distraction.</p>.<p>When she is at home in the cramped family apartment, the 18-year-old said she feels that "the drone is constantly with me in my bedroom -- worry and fear don't leave our homes.</p>.<p>"Sometimes I have to put the pillow on my head so I don't hear its buzz," she said, adding that the drone noise gives her headaches.</p>.<p>Unmanned surveillance aircraft have become an integral part of Israel's 15-year-old blockade of the impoverished enclave, and 2.3 million Palestinians endure their incessant hum.</p>.<p>Bissam, whose family requested their surname be withheld for security reasons, said that together with the street noise, the drones create an unbearable cacophony.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/gaza-clears-rubble-buries-dead-as-truce-with-israel-holds-1134473.html" target="_blank">Gaza clears rubble, buries dead as truce with Israel holds</a></strong></p>.<p>"At night I try to review the lessons for my exams, but I can't read because of this annoying racket," she said from the cramped Gaza City apartment she shares with her parents and five siblings.</p>.<p>Each month, Israel uses drones above Gaza for 4,000 flying hours -- the equivalent of deploying five of the unmanned aircraft permanently in the sky -- the military told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>The drones "collect intelligence data 24 hours a day", said Omri Dror, a commander from Israel's Palmachim airbase where the aircraft take off.</p>.<p>During an 11-day war in May 2021 between Israel and Gaza militants, the Israeli army deployed 25 drones for 6,000 flight hours to constantly monitor the territory, according to army data.</p>.<p>It intensified that presence during a three-day conflict in August this year, using 30 drones for a total of more than 2,000 flight hours.</p>.<p>Bissam's mother Rim said she struggles to calm her children when the drones fly overhead, fearing an Israeli air strike could follow even if there is no active conflict.</p>.<p>"I'm basically scared like them. How can I reassure my children?" the 42-year-old said.</p>.<p>The din above the family home is particularly acute due to its proximity to a base of the Al-Qassam Brigades -- the armed wing of Gaza rulers Hamas -- but drones are also heard above busy shopping streets.</p>.<p>"The kids sleep intermittently. We wake up, we sleep, then we wake up" again, Rim said.</p>.<p>In Gaza's southern city of Khan Yunis, psychiatrist Iman Hijjo treats Palestinians whose conflict trauma is triggered by the sound of Israeli drones.</p>.<p>Israel and Hamas have fought four wars over the past 15 years.</p>.<p>"When an insect moves around you, you can hit it, but not the drone," Hijjo said, adding that the situation leads to a "sense of powerlessness".</p>.<p>"The drones keep Gaza's skies closed, without a horizon or hope," she said.</p>.<p>Children suffer "fear and anxiety" as a direct result of the drones, Hijjo said, lamenting a lack of scientific research to determine longer-term impacts.</p>.<p>"Children need to feel safe in order to develop," fellow psychiatrist Sami Oweida said. "But with the presence of drones in the sky, these feelings cannot flourish."</p>.<p>The unmanned aircraft are so omnipresent that artists have even referenced them in their works.</p>.<p>The "sound of drones flying above my family and friends stops the games, the chatting and the laughter", Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha wrote in his recent English-language collection "Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear".</p>.<p>He told AFP that "the buzzing of the drones and the intermittent raids of the F16 (warplanes) have become an integral part of our lives".</p>.<p>"I write about the sky, the sea, the clouds, the setting sun, my children, my neighbours," he added. "But always, the drone is there. It fails to leave us."</p>